And now, another installment in the never-ending story that is the historian’s obligation to address, politely but firmly, ludicrous canards about our past: Ann Gordon and Lynn Sherr want you to know that no matter how often Sarah Palin says so, Susan B. Anthony was not an anti-abortion activist. Extended blockquote under the fold.

Last week in Washington, Sarah Palin addressed the Susan B. Anthony List – the political action committee that calls itself the “nerve center of the pro-life movement” – claiming that her opposition to abortion rights was rooted in our “feminist foremothers.” No one asked for sources.

For nearly 30 years, both of us have been immersed in Susan B. Anthony’s words – Ann as the editor of Anthony’s papers, Lynn as the author of a biography. We have read every single word that this very voluble – and endlessly political – woman left behind. Our conclusion: Anthony spent no time on the politics of abortion. It was of no interest to her, despite living in a society (and a family) where women aborted unwanted pregnancies.

The List’s mission statement proclaims, “Although [Anthony] is known for helping women win the right to vote, it is often untold in history that she and most early feminists were strongly pro-life.” There’s a good reason it’s “untold:” historians and good journalists rely on evidence. Of which there is none.

The bits of information circulating on the Web always cite “Marriage and Maternity,” an article in a newspaper owned for several years after the Civil War by Susan B. Anthony. In it, the writer deplores “the horrible crime of child-murder,” and signs it simply, “A.” Although no data exists that Anthony wrote it, or ever used that shorthand for herself, she is imagined to be its author. The anti-abortion forces also ignore the paragraph in which the anonymous author vigorously opposes “demanding a law for its suppression.” In other words, the article opposes the criminalization of abortion and was written by someone other then Anthony. Untold? Unproven.

The only clear reference to abortion in Susan B. Anthony’s writings, recently discovered by Ann, was quickly fitted into the anti-abortion narrative. After a visit with her brother, Anthony remarks in her diary that her sister-in-law aborted a pregnancy, things did not go well, and the woman was bedridden. Anthony concludes, “She will rue the day she forces nature.” Clearly Anthony did not applaud her sister-in-law’s action, but the notation is ambiguous. Is it the act of abortion that will be regretted? Or is it being bedridden, the risk taken with one’s own life? At most, the quotation amounts to private disapproval within the family, unlikely to be voiced to her beloved relative. But there is no hint that this is a social problem or a political matter. No one could mistake the diary entry for “passionate abhorrence” to abortion, a commitment to “pro-life activism” — as pro-lifers claim.

Naming this lobby for Susan B. Anthony doesn’t change her views any more than clicking your heels three times gets you back to Kansas.

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13 comments

Little-known fact: Susan B. Anthony was pro-me. In a letter in one of her newspapers written just before the US-Zhungarian War, she said, “give Erik all ur moneys!”
Don’t bother looking it up. The Frankfurt School hates me, and made the lamestream media suppress the evidence by earthquaking the archive. (They do that, by the way.)

You wouldn’t think an activist like Susan B. Anthony would be the inventor of the lazy Susan, but people are complicated. And she used it not for food, but to pick which cause she’d support that day. She had different sectors marked out for each cause and then spun the wheel every morning.